Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko has stated that the document circulating in the media represents, according to him, the real peace plan that the United States intends to propose to Ukraine.
This plan outlines the American vision for how the conflict could be ended, including a series of political, military, and diplomatic steps. He emphasizes that, although the plan has not been officially released by Washington, the central element of the document is the requirement for a stable security agreement and a new international architecture that would guarantee long-term peace in the region.
The Ukrainian MP notes that this plan has sparked mixed reactions in Kyiv and is expected to undergo extensive political and diplomatic debate.
1. Ukraine
Permanently outside NATO — written into the Constitution.
Limited armed forces, no nuclear status.
Security guarantees from the U.S. — but with conditions.
- Territories
Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk — de facto recognized as Russian.
Kherson and Zaporizhzhia — frozen along current front lines.
A demilitarized neutral zone under de facto Russian control.
- Russia
Promises “non-aggression” and formalizes it legally.
Gradual return to the G8.
Step-by-step lifting of sanctions.
- What Ukraine receives
$200 billion for reconstruction (including $100 billion from frozen Russian assets).
Restart of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant under IAEA supervision, with energy shared 50/50.
Major U.S.–EU investments and a Development Fund.
- Humanitarian measures
Exchange of all prisoners for all (“all-for-all”) and the return of abducted children.
- Domestic politics
Elections 100 days after signing.
Full amnesty for all participants in the war.
- Oversight
Implementation monitored by a “Peace Council” led by Donald Trump.
Violations result in sanctions.
Immediate ceasefire and withdrawal to agreed positions.
